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Ex-cricketer in deportation case running out of options

Hartley Alleyne says the whole affair has left him "drained"
Hartley Alleyne says the whole affair has left him "drained"

FORMER West Indian Test and Kent county cricketer Hartley Alleyne is meeting lawyers on Friday in a last bid to stay in the country.

The cricket coach and boarding assistant at St Edmund's School, Canterbury, received another setback when a Home Office review upheld its decision not to grant him a work permit.

Mr Alleyne, 50, said: "This has been so draining for me. I don't know what options are left for me. Words fail me but rules are rules, they say."

Barbados-born Mr Alleyne, who has lived and worked in the UK for nearly 30 years, was refused a work permit because he does not have an NVQ. He has now started the qualification but is not sure it will make any difference.

He said: "It is so frustrating dealing with the Home Office. I do not know if this NVQ will change things for me."

Canterbury MP Julian Brazier said: "I am deeply saddened by this. At a time when government is failing to deport foreign terror suspects and fraudsters, it defies belief that we can turn out a man who has given nearly 30 years to English cricket."

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